School of Music
College of Performing and Visual Arts
A native of Northern Virginia, Dr. Tim Feerst is Director of Percussion Studies and Assistant Professor of Music at the University
of Northern Colorado, where he teaches Applied Percussion Lessons and Percussion Methods,
as well as directs the Percussion Ensemble. Prior to his appointment at UNC, he served
on the faculties of the University of Texas Permian Basin, the University of Texas
at Tyler, Trinity Valley Community College, the University of Utah, and North Central
Texas College. Dr. Feerst holds a Doctor of Musical Arts in Percussion Performance
from the University of North Texas. He also holds a Master’s in Percussion Performance
from the University of Texas at Austin and a Bachelor’s in Music Education from George
Mason University. His teachers include Mark Ford, Christopher Deane, Paul Rennick,
Ed Soph, Ed Smith, Michael Drake, José Aponte, Thomas Teasley, Thomas Burritt, Tony
Edwards, John Kilkenny, and John Spirtas.
Hailed by the Dallas-Ft. Worth-based performing arts magazine Theater Jones as having
"the most beautiful, long, and evenly sounding timpani rolls," Dr. Feerst has performed
with ensembles including the Amarillo Symphony, The Dallas Winds, the Dallas Symphony
Chorus, the West Texas Symphony, the Big Spring Symphony, the Texarkana Symphony,
the Kingdom Hearts Orchestra, Voces8, Sō Percussion, and the American Festival Pops
Orchestra. Additionally, he was a founding member of the Winter Guard International
(WGI) Finalist George Mason University Indoor Percussion Ensemble and marched center
snare in 2009. Dr. Feerst has recording credits with The Southern Music Company,
The Dallas Winds, Ryan Anthony and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and the North Texas
Wind Symphony. Most recently, he recorded drums and percussion for indie artist Erica
Lane's single "The Friendly Beasts," which reached #37 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary
(AC) chart during the Holiday 2022 season.
As an educator, Dr. Feerst has instructed at a variety of public schools in Texas,
Utah, and Virginia. He frequently serves as an adjudicator for organizations such
as USBands, the Intermountain Percussion Association (IMPA), the Utah High School
Activities Association (UHSAA), the Utah Chapter of the Percussive Arts Society, TMEA,
the Texas Educational Colorguard Association (TECA), and the Virginia Band and Orchestra
Directors Association (VBODA). In addition, he has presented research and clinics
at the TMEA Convention, the College Music Society South Central Conference, and the
National Conference on Percussion Pedagogy.
Dr. Feerst is an advocate for new works for percussion and has commissioned, premiered,
and participated in several consortiums for music by composers such as Gene Koshinski,
Corey Robinson, Jenna Wright, James Wood, Brian Nozny, Brett William Dietz, Nathan
Daughtrey, Marc Mellits, Alejandro Viñao, Ivan Trevino, Joe W. Moore III. He also
premiered Jeffrey Emge’s composition “Morning on Tai Mountain” for Alto Saxophone
and Snare Drum with Sarah Roberts at the 2021 North American Saxophone Alliance Region
IV Conference.
Active in the Percussive Arts Society (PAS), Dr. Feerst has been published in Percussive Notes, the official research journal of PAS, and currently serves on the University Pedagogy
Committee, having previously served on the Contest and Audition Procedures Committee.
He has also made writing contributions to The Instrumentalist and the percussion education website, DrumChattr.com. Additional professional memberships
include the National Association for Music Education (NAfME) and the College Music
Society (CMS).
Dr. Feerst proudly endorses Pearl Drums/Adams Musical Instruments, Black Swamp Percussion,
Vic Firth and Balter sticks and mallets, and Zildjian Cymbals.
For more information about Dr. Feerst, please visit his official website at: www.timfeerstpercussion.com.